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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE I'ulilltlinl Kvcrjf l-'rlduy, P? r A mi Mm . . ? ? ? - ? ? ?'?00 II 1). N *!<??, . ... . ) > t'ol>JJ*Jjer?. K. McPoW'tfll, , ) Ka'*r*4 at ???. cUm atil watt %r at (Im PmUIIki at Caa4?a. Soallt (arei'aa. I loo liroad St. ? 'I'liotiu StU ( niudi n, H. Nov. 14. IDIiJ. N, (>. I'ylcn, of Columbia, hu? fa % VOied Tho t hronh lo with a copy of the kim'oikI ??<) 1 1 Ion of hi* "Memory floniH, or Hlw>r(. Quo! litlouH." H in In book lot form and in ipdeed a (urn. The price of the publication j I* 15 cent#, ' 2i " ' V AdviMrtiMlii^ in < ounU'y Wtn^klbH. . i ? Time witH when I he county news paper Wau glad to gat any old price for advertimig Hpaco. Thai, day, luckily for tli? puldlKbiTH, ban pa#* <?d. It Ih now coming to bo recog ?ized (bat I ho hcHt pOHHlble mod 111 ill for reaching tho people in 4 ho ono Mine doHpbcd country weekly. Thin fact hitH brought ilio nownpaporH to i a realisation of Hh value to the ad- | vtrtlrtor, in other wordy, t li country paper thlnkH more of itHolf (ban for- 1 nerly, and having come to realist? : that It Ih of value an. an advcrtln- | lag medium, it began to come to do~ npnd adequate rotijru.B for It b Bpao.o. Come to think of it, a newnpaper haH no source of Income Have adver tising Hpaco and HubHcription. Th la latter Hource of Income Ih, at $1 a year MubftcrlptioiiH, rather limited The chief Hource of income Ih that of Hpaco at an unprofitable rate Ih 'o Jourrnoy down the road lo dcatru ? Ion, And the poorer tho rate the upeedier conteB tin? dent ruction. Tho county weekly affords a good advertising medium at a minimum <:oHt. It dooH more; it reaches the ?pot, for it Ih limited in number of Opera House Monday Nov. 17 J. A. GOBURN'S GHIK1AT3DR. PRESENTING AN ALL WHITE COMPANY..... ?Everything New. Every Season. Beautiful Ensemble Spectacle. (A Gala Nljjlit Aboard a Battleship.) "JOLLY JACK TARS AT PLAY." Splendid Scenic Production of a Modern American Dreadnaught and the men who man them. THE OIIHAT BIG FUN SHOW AND ALL THAT IS NEW IN MINSTRELSY. Splendid Male Choir. Sparkling Comedy. Unexcelled Dancing. High-Class Minstrel Vaudeville. THE SHOW YOU KHOW PARADE and BAND CONCERTS DAILY pages; It goe? to. many homes Into which no other paper go? s, and it 1h read more for tjio?e very Reason**, vVUhin the next few years the couu try weekly will \h> adjudge^! yOv more highly as uii advertising iued-! tun). It will (tome fully. Into It* own, ? Unlon Times. Tim U-vIored K?*lr. The Korsnaw County colored Fair Ass caulon In making gient "jrepar? in ion h for a t>u? cestui fair tl?U year to lie held Nov. SJU-21 -22, The assot iation takes this medium to thank all the friends both white add citored for their many favors in the past which lulled i he fairs to he successful. We will appreciate any iitvoi h shown this year n> our good friends, especially along* the line ot articles which vylll ho u?ed as yre miuius. F. P, Wiley, Pres., j % j Hoi ace 'i homas, 8g<. .Mathilda ha\lM lirad. Another < / our faithful colored ! cill^etvti paused away at twelve o' clock Hunduy night, when "Tlldle" [ Davie died tiuddLiiiy ui huujrt dibQaae ; at Ik r home in Kirkwood. Hiic?. wan a'faiih'Ul member of the Alt, Morlah Baptist church, and her funeral services took pwue from t hat church at 'eleven 'o'clock Tues day morning, conducted hy her pas tor, lle\. J. w. Boykln. A large concourse of relativcH' and friends attended. Hhe had heen In the service of the von TreHckow family for over twelve yearn and except for a abort Illness two years ago, had never missed a day from her duiieg. For honesty, Integrity and faithfulness Hhe wan a credit to the town and a shining light to her people. Accident at Fair (jrounds. While driving a very spirited horso at the fair grounds yesterday afternoon Mr. It. B. Elliott acci dentally ran into little Laura Ada McCasklll, the nix year old adopted daughter of Mf. A, M. McCasklll, knocking h?r down. At first it wan t IioiikIi ? ? hiti ? 4h? child's log was broken but her injuries are wet considered serious. PFKK1 ) N A I , M K NTIO N . Matters of (General Interest Secured by Our Reporters. MIkb Joe I lam 1 In, of Mt. Pleasant, la vlaltlng Mrs. W. U. Zemp. Mra. W. P. Bennett, of Lancaster, was a visitor at the fair. Mrs. I). J. Ham rick .and Mrs. J. W Cash, of Rolling Springs, N. C., aro | the guests of Mrs. J. C. Nicholson. Miss Kate Nicholson and Mrs.. Joe Hough, of Beth une, were here today. Missea Bailie and Jessie Boswell, | of Columbia, were fair week visitors. j Miss AIiiih Holden has been so-', lected to teach the Broom school, 11 sir the Lancaster line In. the north-! ern section cl' this county. Her school will open Monday morning. Mr. Walter Schrock, who is now a linotype operator on the Colum bia ltccord, was a visitor at the fair < yesterday. ' I Mr. William Doas, a good citizen of Kershaw, was among the visitors here Wednesday. Mr. 10. C. 'Zemp, who has been at Booneville, Ind., for the cast se\er al months, was among those pres ent for home-coming week. Details of one of the most cold blooded homlcidts In the memory of any living man in Chester county were brought to light early Monday morning, when Deputy Sheiff S. W, Bindreman and J. (I. liowse return-' ed from the Stover neighborhood! with 10d Sibley, who is charged with j the killing of J. Ross Youuge with an axe Friday evening, near home ( of Sibley's son. Alter the affair j "I)r. C. C. Crosby waa summoned and I sewing the frightful condition of Younge'a cuts hurried him to thei Magdalene Hospital. Everything possible was done for him but he passed away Sunday night. DEFIANCE FROM A DISTANCE Discomfited Hully Certainly G*va Hli A dvaraary What Might Ba Called Fair and Proper Warning. Muny of the beat Pennaylvanla ! atorlea come from the lumber campa. j Tbia bit of rough and ready hlatory waa told In a tyvtel lobby by a vlaltor ' to Philadelphia from the great Weat branch valley of the Susquehanna: "Faddy Wood waa the porter at the : Oinrtcky houae In my town. lie waa a mark for rnlachlevoua boye , who fovnd that he would chase tbem If properly batted. He had a board about Ave feet^Jong which be prom ised to uae on his tormentor*, thus adding to the aplce of danger to the aport. "One eummer evening 1'addy Wood sat on at bench In front pf the tavern, his board leaning within ea ay reach agalnat the building- Paddy Plank, a swaggering woodsman, with numerous raw or "natural" whiskies under his belt, hove 'In sight. He stopped In the road, fumbled for his Woodstock pipe for several minutes and was a longer time lighting it. The wood stock pipe wuh a cavalier affair usu ally smoked with the bowl turned down by men who affected bravado. It was not the pipe of peace, however, for the moment Paddy Plank's orbs sighted Paddy Wood he discovered that his system craved a little Kil kenny fun and he begun to hand < Paddy Wood some choice compli ments, such um are usually set afloat when one Is locking for trouble. "Paddy Wood deliberately arose from the bench, picked up hiu board and smote Paddy Plank on the jaw, knocking his pipe across the lot, the sparks from which described an aro of Are like a rocket. "Surprised at the speed of Paddy Wood's response ? he didn't expect It by wire ? and Beelng his disadvantage, he started to run, with Paddy Wood trying to lift him off his feet With : every Jump. I "Ab soon uh he reached a safe dis tance from his pursuer, Paddy Plank turned around and uttered this piece of defiance: " 'Kape away from me! Kape away from me! or you will have your heart's blood on me hands!'" Brazil's Rubber. A large part of the world's supply of crude rubber comes from the repub lic of Brazil, which has hitherto paid little attention to the manufacture of that commodity. Another day Is com ing. Brazil is about to engage intelli gently In the manufacture of rubber, an enterprise which, In the course of time, may affect the manufacture of that material In the United States and Europe, by bringing in a new and for midable competitor. -Le Brezil Eco nomiquo of Rio de Janeirc says that under favorable conditions offered by the government refineries of caou tchouc (rubber) will be established in a number of statea and factories for the manufacture of rubber articles In the cities of Manaos, Belem in Para, Recife and Bahia. There will be spe cial exemptions in the way of duties upon articles imported for the carry ing forward of this enterprise. Wants ? For Sale ? Rents Ada Inserted under (his heading for 1 cent per word. No ad taken ; for less than 2f> cents. POSITION WANTED ? Experienc ed lady bookkeeper, now employed, desires position. Best reference. Address Miss M. V. O'B., 4 George Street, Charleston, S. C. ' WANTED? Lady to work on furs. Write Canulen Pur Parlor, P. O. Box 3-85, Camden, S. C. FOR SALE ? At a Bargain, One Babcoik Surrey; also new set Buggy Harness. Apply to C. P. DuBose* Canulen, S. C. We have arranged a special opportunity for -J t V- . tt, you to tee for the first time in our town, the only range made with Patented Keystone Copper - Bearing Alu minum-Fused Flues. THE SOUTH BEND MALLEABLE is the'greatesjt triumph of range making. Its flues are made from the best rust-resisting metal known in range construction. An Expert Demonstrator Will Be Here All the Week ? ' ? H* We'll make every purchaser of one of these ranges during the week of the exhibit a present of a valuable set of PURE ALUMINUM COOKING WARE. These will be useful Souvenirs Free. Be sure and come early. Remember the Place and Date ? November 17-22. j ) Malone-Pearce-Young Hardware Co t<Y?/? SALE ? Choice Indian Ilun iiot s, some now laying; S. C. Brown Leghorns; Cornhsh Indian Games; White Wyanndoties, males and fe males. PriceB that will pJease. G. A. DeKay, Phone 2013, Camden. WANTED? Will pay highest mar ket price for Geeae. W. Armstrong, It. F. D. 3, High Point, N. C. FOR. SALE- ? Bancroft Seed Oats. Very fine. Apply to A. H. Boykin, Boy kins, S. C. ? 30-31 FOR RENT? -Three large unfur nished rooms with all conveniences, on Laurens streot. Apply at The Chronicle office. 27tf. "SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS" To Bo Soen Soon at the Camden Opera House. Harold Bell Wright, who is said to bo ihe most popular of tho young er American novelists, with the as- ! sistance of lSlsberry W. Reynolds, ! has made a dramatization of his most widely read novel, "The Shep- | herd of the Hills," its initial pro- | ducilon in this section will take | place Friday night, Nov. 28th, at the Camden Opera Ilouse.^.. Mr. Wright is a man with a mis sion and a message ? he is a story teller, and when the story ends wo bjgin a better life "along the sun lit fie ds ? where the light lingers oven when the sun is down.", Wo start this journey of "The Higher Trail Among the Hills" because the gifUd writer puts into our hearts the benediction of a renewed faith in men and women, a vital love for truth, and Jjeauty, and a deathless, hope In the good outcome among the mysteries brooding where our Pilgrim-way meets horizon shadows. He calls his Btory a very old story. This is true, Indeed, for have not Good and Bad been in ceaseless con f'ict since the dawn of human life? Have not toil and love gathered their blossoms and fruit since the time when men and women first learned to weep and sing? The story is old if ago comes with the portrayal of the elemental and eter nal forces of our human worid; but it is new ? wonderfully fresh and Hweoi with the morning light and dew of virgin hills and valleys tor these age-long forces of t he soul find expressmen in the charac ters to whom we have never heea in: rcduced until now. Yet these people of the Ozarks are real flesk and blood folk; some, it is true, reach the heroic; still we feel ia them the throb of kinship to all who live outside their almost en chanted land. Here is a play worth seeing I* this day of multitudinous and insip id drama. Here is a plot. The movement is ever onward ? there are no retrogade and meaningles? eddies in this stream of happenings. The current of events seizes you and takes you on and on, and when the end ooipes you are glad and s rrowful ? glad because so good * play ends as it does, sorrowful be causo it ends so soon. AUCTION SALE OF Camden, S. C, Saturday, November 22nd, at W. W. King's Stables We will sell one carload of Unbroke MareS-and Fillies, one at a time, to the highest hfdder, amongt which are some mares with mule colts by their sides, some mares with horse colts, some mares in foal. We will have some one and two year old fillies. Now is your chance to get some mares and fillies for i breeding purposes, as this is a choice lot of stock. These are not draft horses; they are driving and sad-] die bred stock, being sired by such stallions as the Hambletonian, Wilkes and Mont Rose* The muler colts are sired by Kentuckey Jacks. U^DON'T HISS THIS SALE. ? ' SALE BEGINS PROMPTLY AT 10 A. M. RAIN OR SHINE WILL SELL ONLY ONE DAY IN YOUR TOWN. SO REMEMBER DATE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, SEE W. W. KING, CAMDEN, Sr C.